Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KARAM CHAND THAPAR & BROS. (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, (CENTRAL)CALCUTTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/02/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
GROVER, A.N.
RAMASWAMI, V.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1241 1969 SCR (3) 796
1969 SCC (1) 616
ACT:
Income Tax-Single transaction of sale resulting in profit-
When such profit should be deemed to be revenue liable to
tax-income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 24(1) and (2)-Sale in
one accounting year and settlement of price in the
succeeding year-Sale resulting in cessation of business and
in loss-Assessment proceedings for the latter year--lf loss
an allowable deduction under s. 24(1).
HEADNOTE:
The assessee-company was carrying on the business of coal
mining and of a Dry Ice Factory, in addition to various
other kinds of business. It obtained a prospecting licence,
and after prospecting for coal sold it within a short time
of its acquisition and thereby earned profits in the accoun-
ting years 1948-49 and 1949-50. It sold the Ice Factory in
1948. Though the purchaser took possession of the ice
factory in 1948, the price was finally settled in December
1949. By that sale the assessee-company suffered a loss.
The assessee claimed (1) that the ’profits were gains of a
capital nature and hence not liable to tax; and (2) that the
loss was deductible from its income in the assessment year
1950-51.
(1) The department, Tribunal and High Court held that the
profits from the sale of colliery were in the nature of
revenue and were liable to tax under the Income Tax Act, in
the two corresponding assessment years, namely, 1949-50 and
1950-51; and
(2) It was held that loss in the ice factory transaction
was suffered in the accounting year 1948-49 and assessee’s
claim could be sustained only under s. 24(2), of the Income
tax Act, 1922, but that the subsection was not applicable,
because, the business ceased completely before the
commencement of the following accounting year 1949-50
(assessment year 1950-51).
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) Where a person disposes of a part or the whole of
his assets the general ’rule is that the mere change or
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realization of an investment does not attract liability to
income tax, but, where such a realisation is an act which in
itself is a trading transaction, profit earned by sale or
conversion is taxable. In determining whether the gain is
realization of a mere enhancement of value (capital gain) or
is again made in an operation of business in carrying out a
scheme for profit-making (revenue) no uniform rule can be
evolved. Though a transaction is an isolated one, it may be
intimately related to the normal business of the tax-payer.
in such a case, the profit arising from the transaction will
be out of the tax payer’s business and will be assessable as
business profits. [799 C-D. F) 800 B-C]
Prospecting of coal was a part of the mining business which
the assessee was carrying on. Therefore, the transaction of
prospecting, developing and selling the colliery was one in
the nature of business.
797
Hence, the profit arising from the sale, though it was an
isolated transaction, was in the nature of revenue and
liable to tax. [801 F-H]
Janki Ram Bahadur Ram v. Commissioner of Income-tax, 57
I.T.R. 21, 25(S.C.), followed.
Commissioner of Taxes v. Melbourne Trust Ltd. [1914] A.C.
1001, 1010 (P.C.), Californian Copper Syndicate (Limited and
Reduced) V. Harris (Surveyor of Taxes) 5 T.C. 159, 166,
Imperial Tobacco Co. v. Kelly, 25 T.C. 292, Beynon & Co.
Ltd. v. Ogg (Surveyor of Taxes) 7 T.C. 125 and Gloucester
Railway Carriage and Wagon Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of
inland Revenue, 12 T.C. 720, referred to.
(2) By s. 24(1) the loss or profits or gains suffered under
any head in any year was liable to be set off in that year
against the income, profits or gains under any other head;
but by S. 24(2) where the loss suffered in any business,
profession or vocation could not be wholly set off under
sub-s. (1) the loss not so set off has to be carried forward
to the following year and set off against the profits and
gains of the same business in the subsequent year. L802 F-
G]
In the present case, loss was suffered in the accounting
year 1949-50 when the price was settled and not in 1948-49
when the sale took place. Therefore, under s. 24(1) the
loss was allowable against the business income of the
assessee for the accounting year 1949-50, that is, in
proceedings for the assessment year 1950-51. [803 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1594 and
1595 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated August 29, 1963 of
the Calcutta High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 38 of
1960.
Sachin Chaudhuri, T. A. Ramachandran and D. N. Gupta, the
appellant (in both the appeals).
D. Narsaraju, S. K. Aiyar, R. N. Sachthey and B. D. Sharma
for the respondent (in both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. In respect of assessment years 1949-50 and 1950-51
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal referred five questions
to the High Court of Calcutta under s. 66(1) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922. Three of those questions which are
canvassed in these appeals need be set out :
Assessment year 1949-50
"(1) Whether on the facts and in the
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circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs.
51,550/- was A profit in the nature of revenue
and therefore liable to tax under the Indian
Income-tax Act ?"
Assessment year 1950-51
"(3) Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs.
8,756/- was a profit
798
in the nature of revenue ’and was subject to
tax under the Indian Income-tax Act ?
(4) Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the loss of Rs.
34,891/- was allowable as a deduction against
the business income of the assessee for the
assessment year 1950-51?"
The appellant--a limited Company incorporated under the
Indian Companies Act, 1913--carries on business as managing
agents, dealers in shares and stocks, stores and spare
parts of machinery and acts as insurance agents and
manufacturers of carbon dioxide. It also works certain coal
mines. The Company obtained a prospecting licence from the
State of Korea for the Chirimiri Colliery in 1944 and after
prospecting for coal sold the colliery, and thereby earned a
profit of Rs. 51,550 in the account year 1948-49 and Rs.
8,756 in the account year 1949-50. The Income-tax Officer
brought the profits arising out of the sale of the colliery
to tax as business profits. The order was confirmed in
appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal.
The Company conducted a Dry Ice Factory at Lahore. The
factory was sold in September 1948 to the Indo-Pakistan
Corporation Ltd. The purchaser took over the factory on
October 1, 1948, but the price was finally settled in
December, 1949. By the sale the Company suffered a loss of
Rs. 34,891. The Company claimed to deduct this loss from
its income assessable to tax in the assessment year 1950-51.
The Income-tax Officer disallowed, the claim. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner agreed with that view, and the
Tribunal confirmed the order.
In answering questions (1) & (3) the High
Court observed
"The Chirimiri Colliery was sold after
prospecting and proving coal. The sale in
such ’a case was a part of the trading
activities of the assessee- and such activity
could be gathered from the surrounding circum-
stances as also from the manner in which it
was sold, that is, within a very short time
after its acquisition and after it was made
fit for obtaining a reasonably higher price at
the sale........ The profit thus acquired can-
not be treated as a capital asset."
In answering question (4) the High Court
observed
"The loss of Rs. 34,891 sustained by the
assessee after the sale of Dry Ice Factory at
Lahore in September 1948 cannot be treated as
a loss of the business of sale, inasmuch as
the Tribunal found as a fact that the loss not
having occurred in the relevant accounting
799
year, was referable to the transaction of
business during a period when the business
completely ceased before the commencement of
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the accounting year.
Counsel for the Company urges that prospecting for coal
under a licence obtained from the State of Korea was not,
part of the business operations of the Company and that by
selling the rights in the mine, the Company disposed of its
assets and made gains of a capital nature. In any event, it
was urged, this was a single transaction and in the absence
of evidence that the Company carried on the business of
obtaining prospecting licences and of selling the mines if
"coal was proved", the profit arising out of sale of the
mine which was a capital asset acquired by that transaction
was not taxable.
Where a person disposes of a part or the whole of his assets
the general rule is that the mere change or realisation of
an investment does not attract liability to income-tax but
where such a realisation is an act which in itself is a
trading transaction, profit earned by sale or conversion is
taxable : Commissioner of Taxes v. Melbourne Trust Ltd.(1)
The cases which illustrate this distinction fall broadly
into two categories-those where the sales formed part of
trading activity, and, those in which the sale or
realisation was not an act of trading. As observed in
Californian Copper Syndicate (Limited and Reduced) v. Harris
(Surveyor of Taxes) (2) the test is--Is the sum of gain that
has been made a mere enhancement of value by realising a
security, or, is it a gain made in an operation of business
in carrying out a scheme for profit-making ?"
In determining whether the gain is realization of mere en-
hancement of value or is a gain made in an operation of
business in carrying out a scheme for profit-making, do
uniform rule ran be evolved. It was observed by this Court
in Janki Ram Bahadur Ram v. Commissioner of Income-tax(3) :
"........ no single fact has decisive
significance, and the question whether a
transaction is an adventure in the nature of
trade must depend upon the collective effect
of all the relevant materials brought on the
record. But general criteria indicating that
certain facts have dominant significance in
the context of other facts have been adopted
in the decided cases. if, for instance, a
transaction is related to the business which
is normally carried on by the assessee, though
not directly part of it, an intention to
launch upon an, adventure in the nature of
trade may readily be inferred.
(1) [1914] A.C. 1001, 1010 (P.C.)
(2) 5 T.C. 159,166.
(3) 57 I.T.R. 21, 25.
800
A similar inference would arise where a
commodity is purchased and sub-divided,
altered, treated or repaired and sold, or is
converted into a different commodity and then
sold. Magnitude of the transaction of pur-
chase, the nature of the commodity, subsequent
dealings and the manner of disposal may be
such that the transaction may be stamped with
the character of a trading venture: . . . . "
A transaction of sale may in a given case be isolated : in
another it may be intimately related to the normal business
of the tax-payer. In the latter class profit arising from
the transaction will probably arise out of the tax-payer’s
business and will be assessable as business profits. An
instructive case of this class is Imperial Tobacco Co. (of
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Great Britain and Ireland) Ltd. v. Kelly(1). In that case
the Company carried on the business of tobacco manufacture,
for which large quantities of tobacco leaf were purchased in
the United States, where the Company maintained a large
buying Organisation. To finance the purchases and the
expenses of this Organisation the Company bought dollars in
the United Kingdom through its bankers who remitted them to
the banking accounts of the Company in the United States,
and it was the practice of the Company to accumulate a large
holding of dollars each year before the leaf season
commenced. The Company never bought dollars for the purpose
of resale as a speculation. On the outbreak of war, in
September 1939. the appellant Company, at the request of the
Treasury, stopped all further purchases of tobacco leaf in
the United States, and, as a result, the Company had on
hand, a holding of dollars accumulated between January and
August, 1939. On September 30, 1939, the Company was
ordered under the Defence (Finance) Regulations, 1939, to
sell its surplus dollars to the Treasury, and, owing to the
rise in the rate of exchange, the sale resulted in a profit
to the Company. It was held by the Court of Appeal that the
profit was liable to be included as profits of its trade
under Sch. D Case 1. The tax-payer was not carrying on
business in dollars, but the transactions in dollars were
intimately related to their principal business and the
profits earned by sale of dollars were treated as profits
taxable as business profits.
In T. Beynon & Co. Limited V. Ogg (Surveyor of TaxeS(2) the
tax-payer carrying on business as Coal Merchants, Ship and
Insurance Brokers, and as sole selling agent for various
Colliery Companies, in which latter capacity it was part of
its duty to purchase wagons on behalf of its clients, bought
a large number of wagons on his own account with the
intention of reselling them
(1) 25 T. C. 292.
(2) 7 T. C. 125.
801
at profit. The contention of the tax-payer that the
transaction being an isolated one, the profit was in the
nature-of a capital profit on the realisation of an
investment was negatived. The profits realised in this
transaction were held to result from the operation of the
Company’s business and properly includable in the
computation of the Company’s profits for assessment under
Sch. D. In Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Co. Ltd.
v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue(1) the tax-payer
carried on the business of manufacturing wagons for sale or
hire. The tax-payer sold some of the wagons which were
formerly hired out. The tax-payer contended that the profit
realized by sale was an isolated transaction resulting in a
capital profit. The House of Lords held that the "business
was all one’, namely, to make profit out of wagons and on
that account the profits realized by sale of wagons were
taxable.
The Tribunal in the present case recorded the following
findings :
"It is no doubt true that this was a single
transaction’ But we were told by the
assessee’s counsel that the assessee
obtained prospecting licence in the colliery,
developed the colliery and then sold out.
What was the purpose of obtaining the
prospecting licence has not been told to us.
The assessee was carrying on business of coal
mining. The prospecting of coal is a part of
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the coal mining business. Therefore, in our
opinion, the transaction of prospecting,
developing and selling the colliery is a
transaction in the nature of a business.
Therefore, the profit arising from the sale
is a profit in the nature of revenue and has
been rightly brought to tax."
Our task would have been lightened if the Tribunal had
stated the findings in greater detail. Nevertheless the
Tribunal has found that the Company was carrying on the
business, of coal mining and prospecting of coal was a part
of the coal mining business and on that account the
transaction of prospecting, developing and selling the
colliery was a transaction in the nature of a business. On
the findings recorded by the Tribunal it follows that the
prospecting for, coal being a part of the coal mining
business, the income was properly regarded as taxable. The
answer recorded by the High Court on questions (1) & (3)
must be upheld.
Turning to the fourth question : the sale transaction of the
Dry Ice Factory, was completed on October 1, 1948, but the
price was finally settled in December 1949. In the
settlement, the Company suffered a loss of Rs. 34,891. The
loss was suffered in the
(1) 12 T. C. 720.
802
business transaction and the only dispute raised before the
Tribunal related to the year in which the loss was liable to
be taken into account. The Tribunal disallowed the loss in
the assessment of income for the year 1950-51. The Tribunal
held that the business of the Dry Ice Factory was not
carried on in the year of account April 1, 1949 to March 31,
1950, and on that account the loss was hot admissible as a
permissible deduction in computing the taxable income of the
Company for the assessment year 1950-51. The High Court
agreed with the Tribunal. In our judgment, the High Court
was in error in holding that the loss was not a permissible
deduction.
Section 24 of the Income-tax Act, 1922, in the relevant year
of assessment read as follows :
"(1) Where any assessee sustains a loss of
profits or gains in any year under any of the
heads mentioned in section 6, he shall be
entitled to have the amount of the loss set
off against as income, profits or gains under
any other head in that year
Provided that
(2) Where any assessee sustains a loss of
profits or gains in any year, being a previous
year not earlier than the previous year for
the assessment for the year ending on the 31st
day of March, 1940, under the head profits of
business, profession or vocation, and the loss
cannot be wholly set off under sub-section (1)
the portion not so set off shall be carried
forward to the following year and set off
against the profits or gains, if any, of the
assessee from the same business, profession or
vocation for that year
Provided that
By sub-s. ( 1 ) the loss or profits or gains suffered under
any head in any year was liable to be set off against the
income, profits or gains under any other head, and by sub-s.
(2) where the loss suffered in any business, profession or
vocation could not be wholly set off under sub-s. ( 1 ) the
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loss not so set off had to be carried forward to the
following year and set off against the profits and gains of
the same business in the subsequent years. The Tribunal and
the High Court applied sub-s. (2) of s. 24 in computing the
taxable income of the Company for the assessment year 1950-
51. But in so proceeding, in our judgment, they were in
error. The business of Dry Ice Factory was sold in October,
1948. We will assume that the Dry Ice Factory was ’a
separate business of the Company and was not a part of the
other business carried on by the Company. But the price for
which the business was sold was settled in December 1949.
Until the price was
803
settled, loss did not accrue or arise to the Company. The
loss was suffered in the account year 1949-50 and could be
allowed against the income of that year under S. 24(1). The
assumption that the loss was suffered in the previous year
i.e., 1948-49 was, in our judgment, not warranted. The case
was plainly governed by sub-s. (1) of s. 24. The answer to
the fourth question recorded by the High Court must be
discharged.
The answers to questions (1) & (3) recorded by the High
Court are affirmed. Question (4) Will be answered in the
affirmative and in favour of the Company. In view of the
divided success, there will be no order as to costs in this
Court. The order as to costs in the High Court is
maintained.
V.P.S. Appeals allowed in part.
M11 Sup. CI/69-2
804